Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Ottawa police set up a hotline for hate-motivated crimes to be reported. [157] On the night of February 1, Ottawa Police said that about 250 protesters remained around and on Parliament Hill. [158] Ottawa residents reported numerous incidents in which convoy protesters physically assaulted them, or threatened rape or death for wearing masks. [159]
Three days later the main planned rallies gathered across Canada. The rally in Toronto at Yonge-Dundas Square was the largest in Canada, attracting over 6,000 demonstrators, while the one in Ottawa involved close to 3,000. [32] [33] The largest per capita turnout was found in Victoria, where 1,500 people rallied under sunny skies. [34]
Access to Toronto itself from the mainline from Northern Ontario is via the non-TCH southern section of Highway 400, while access from Toronto to Quebec and points east is via Highway 401 (North America's busiest highway and a major national highway in itself), [16] a short non-TCH section of Autoroute 20, and A-30, where the Trans-Canada is ...
Musk eventually bought all of Twitter shares in a $44 billion purchase, and soon thereafter renamed it X. Musk and Gensler have also clashed over regulation of crypto currencies, of which Musk is ...
Updated: Black Friday's best weekend deals are here on Apple AirPods and iPads, Samsung TVs, Bissell vacuums, KitchenAid and Ninja small appliances, gifts for men, women and kids — and more.
John Napier Wyndham Turner (June 7, 1929 – September 19, 2020) was a Canadian lawyer and politician who served as the 17th prime minister of Canada from June to September 1984.
On September 21, 2016, The Globe and Mail reported that Butts had charged moving expenses to Canadian taxpayers in the amount of $$126,669.56 to relocate his residence from Toronto to Ottawa. [20] These expenses included a personalized cash payout of $20,799.10. [21] After it was revealed publicly, Butts agreed to repay $41,618.62. [22]
To fill the Metrolinx order, Alstom has set up a plant in Brampton, Ontario, that will create 100 to 120 full-time direct jobs. In September 2020, the Brampton plant was assembling its first Citadis, [ 27 ] [ 28 ] which was delivered to the Finch West LRT maintenance and storage facility in late July 2021.